i think it is for sure.. but not half court. intense full court should get you fit. adding stuff in will only help (line drills, gassers etc). but ya, i wouldn't expect half court to get you anywhere fit for full.
Perhaps it ought to work for the average player but i must be a non-responder. i find a full court competitive game to be more of a 'test' and just doing that test doesn't actually get my body to adapt to becoming fitter for the sport. It's just too strenuous to be considered training. Training should be something that gives steady improvements with time. A test doesn't always do that. I know that from my experience with the sport and i understand it runs counter to what ppl think. For me it would be like doing heavy squat 1rm attempts and thinking it will make me stronger - it works, kinda, for a bit but it's not the best way to train to achieve the goal of getting stronger steadily over time. Same principle might be at work for basketball fitness. I need a way to build the fitness - a game is too much of a test than a builder.
how is playing full court, frequently, a test?
it's just full court..
playing a real game in a league is a test.
i don't get your analogy.. you're using half court training and it's lack of training effect on full court basketball, to consider yourself a non-responder. that makes no sense to me IMHO.
it's just a full court pickup game. i wouldn't overthink it.
when i hooped, i played like 3-5 games of full court games per day.. i never had a problem with basketball fitness. nor did any of the regulars who came out there to play, every day. if you win a game, you stay on. if you lose, you wait for the next one while working on mechanics or something etc. works out very well at building basketball specific fitness.
some 70+ year old guy used to call next and play games with us occasionally. we had very intense games, but this guy would get into games and try to play. we kinda dreaded it sometimes, he was a liability.. but every1 respected him, he could go up and down the court. he even scored on people a few times. park would go nuts if he did.
in my opinion: if you played full court nearly every day for months and didn't make any conditioning/fitness gains + basketball specific fitness improvements, then you could label yourself a non-responder.
on the other hand, if you want to avoid full court or basketball in general, due to injury risk etc, then what you're looking to do makes more sense. ie, if you want to cross train & somehow have it prepare you for actual basketball, then yea you'll need to do what you're doing. but full court pickup games aren't tests, they are just full court games. you play them and you gain basketball specific fitness.
it'll definitely help. bball is start/stop tho. if you want to really improve your ability in game, without playing games, you need to mimic that a few times per week at least. could be part of your 5k run, just mixing it up fartlek style (sprint/jog/sprint/jog) random stuff etc. additionally, basketball is start/stop using all kinds of forward/backward/lateral movements, so - very different than linear running (which is alot easier). changing direction is rough and takes alot more energy. but still, 5k every day is much better than nothing. it'll surely help considerably.
Good points, i'll try that and see how it goes. I did my first long run yesterday (7km over 60 minutes). And today i'll go the other way and aim for 5km in 20 minutes in repeats of 400-500m at around 4 min/km pace. If i alternate between these two workouts every day, how does that sound? When i can eat more food (soon) i'll add in a sprint session as well but right now im at the edge of recovery between daily running + squatting.
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sounds like it'll work at building endurance for a while. just throw in very light runs (or rest) when you feel too run down to hit those workouts.
pc!